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These steel ball bearings handle higher loads than stainless steel and plastic bearings.
A solid polymer lubricant surrounds the balls, eliminating the need for additional lubrication. Because it's solid, the lubricant blocks out water and dust, extending the life of the bearing.
For greater accuracy and higher speeds, these bearings are made to tighter tolerances than standard ball bearings.
With a spherical raceway and two rows of balls, these bearings compensate for shaft misalignment.
Good for use in electric motors and power generators, these bearings have ceramic balls that insulate against stray current to prevent damage to the bearing.
Mount these bearings onto a hex shaft.
For use on tapered shafts and round shafts with adapter sleeves, these ball-bearings have a spherical raceway to compensate for shaft misalignment.
Mount these bearings onto a square shaft.
The flange ensures proper positioning inside a tube or housing.
Flanged and creating twice as many contact points as angular-contact ball bearings, these bearings ensure correct positioning within a tube or housing and resist radial loads.
Install these bearings for use with combined radial and thrust loads. They are often used in spindle applications and can be combined with cylindrical roller bearings to better handle radial loads.
These bearings have twice as many contact points as angular-contact ball bearings.
Steel balls and washers allow these bearings to handle higher loads than bearings with stainless steel components.
In addition to handling higher loads than three-piece ball bearings, one-piece bearings are easier to handle. They have an outer band that holds the bearing together and acts as a shield against dust and other contaminants.
Found anywhere from machine tool spindles to conveyor rollers, these bearings have a two-piece design that allows for adjustment.
A built-in thrust ball bearing reduces wear from adjacent shaft components, while the needle-roller bearing supports radial loads.
Two rows of rollers give these bearings load capacities over five times higher than comparably sized tapered-roller bearings.
Double rows of tapered bearings support large shafts with heavy loads.
Also known as drawn-cup roller bearings, these are our thinnest roller bearings. The outer ring is drawn out to form a lip that holds the bearing together.
These bearings have higher radial load capacity, speed, and accuracy than standard needle-roller bearings.
Thinner rollers allow these bearings to fit in tighter spaces than tapered-roller thrust bearings.
Run many cycles in tight spaces before replacing or re-greasing carriages.
Mount to vertical surfaces for applications where tight tolerances aren't required.
Roller bearing carriages handle heavier loads than ball bearing and track roller carriages.
Sets include various sizes of quick-hold external grip pullers. Each puller has a cage around the jaws that keeps them in place for a quick job of gripping bearings and pulleys.
Jaws stay aligned, so you can secure bearings and pulleys quickly.